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<p>The family visitor visa has been replaced by the standard visitor visa <a href="https://www.gov.uk/standard-visitor-visa"
target="_blank">https://www.gov.uk/standard-visitor-visa</a></p><p>The information
on total entry clearance visitor visas granted is released quarterly as part of the
Home Office’s Immigration Statistics, available at the .<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GOV"
target="_blank">GOV</a>.<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UK" target="_blank">UK</a>
website.</p><p>The most recent published visas statistics are available at: <a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/immigration-statistics-year-ending-june-2018/list-of-tables#visas"
target="_blank">https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/immigration-statistics-year-ending-june-2018/list-of-tables#visas</a></p>

<p>Savings and other capital held in the name of children are not taken into account
in the assessment of Universal Credit entitlement. As with other means tested benefits,
however, there are rules to prevent claimants depriving themselves of capital in order
to claim Universal Credit or increase their entitlement to Universal Credit. If claimants
deprive themselves of capital by gifting the capital to their children or placing
it in a child’s account, notional capital of the amount deprived may still be taken
into account when assessing entitlement to Universal Credit.</p>

to ask the Secretary of State for Intentional Trade, with reference to the statement
from the Honduran office in the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights condemning the use of force of force by the Honduras Government against
protesters, if he will suspend the license for the unsent order of surveillance equipment
to Honduras.

<p>The goods on this licence were presented to UK Customs for export on 22 February
2018. This licence is now exhausted.</p><p>United Nations reports are considered as
part of the application process. The issue of the licence was consistent with the
Consolidated EU and National Arms Export Licensing Criteria and remained so at the
time of export.</p>

to ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, with reference to the report
entitled, Right treatment right time, published by Rethink Mental Illness, what assessment
he has made of the accuracy of the conclusion that the average waiting time of assessment
by patients with severe mental illness is 14 weeks.

<p>Information on the average waiting time of assessment for patients with severe
mental illness is not collected.</p><p> </p><p>The waiting time standard for people
with first episode psychosis is for 60% to start treatment in an Early Intervention
in Psychosis service within two weeks of referral. In 2017/18 this standard was exceeded,
with 76.2% of people accessing services within two weeks in November 2018.</p>

to ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what lessons have been learned
from the 100,000 Genome Project which will help when deciding what genetic diseases
should be screened for at birth.

<p>The 100,000 Genomes Project is focussed on recruiting patients, including children,
with rare diseases (and their family members) and those with common cancers. These
are areas where whole genome sequencing may offer the best opportunity to diagnose
disease. From the Project’s pilot phase we have found actionable findings in 20-25%
of rare disease patients.</p><p> </p><p>The scope of the project does not include
screening at birth. The Chief Medical Officer, in her annual report Generation Genome,
recommended that that the National Screening Committee conducts a systematic evaluation
of the opportunities offered by genomics for present and potential screening practices.</p>

to ask the Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, with reference to his
Department's publication Ministerial Meetings: January to March 2017, if he will publish
the names of the attendees at the Fintech Roundtable attended by Robin Walker MP.

<p>Details of ministerial and senior official meetings are published in the Department’s
Quarterly Transparency Returns, which are made publicly available on<a href="http://gov.uk/"
target="_blank"> GOV.UK</a>.</p>

to ask the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, which agencies
and other public bodies accountable to him will not have published their annual report
and accounts for 2017-2018 by 31 July 2018; and what the reasons are for each such
body not having done so by that date.

<p>A list of agencies and other public bodies which are accountable to the Department
are listed on gov.uk (https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations). All accounts that
are published will appear on the bodies’ websites. As per the Government Resources
and Accounts Act (2000), there is no legal requirement for agencies or other public
bodies to publish their accounts before the January following year end.</p><p> </p>

to ask Her Majesty’s Government what steps they will take to ensure that the new Education
Cannot Wait fund will focus on the most marginalised children, including girls and
children with disabilities.

<p>The UK has played a leading role in the development of Education Cannot Wait –
a fund for education in emergencies. A key focus for Education Cannot Wait will be
on ensuring that marginalised children and young people are able to access a quality
education. This includes refugees and internally displaced children, as well as children
facing barriers to their education because of their gender, disability or other factors.</p><p>This
focus is reflected in the Fund’s indicative headline results, which commits to providing
“Inclusive education [that] reaches the most marginalised children and young people
in crises” with a target of “100% of supported education opportunities demonstrate
increase in education for girls, disabled and those in remote locations”.</p><p>The
UK will continue to engage closely during Education Cannot Wait’s inception phase,
to ensure that this commitment is fully reflected in its final design and results
frameworks.</p>